| m@ on Tue, 9 Feb 1999 00:21:01 +0100 (CET) |
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| <nettime> Free-PC.com |
7:28 a.m. 8.Feb.99.PST
At what price privacy?
A California company began testing that
question on Monday, taking names -- and a
whole lot more personal information -- from
people eager to get a Compaq computer and
Internet access for free.
Free-PC.com says that Presario PCs will go to
the first 10,000 people to hand over their
consumer dossier, including age, income, family
status, hobbies, and buying habits.
Once they get their computers and turn them
on, recipients will have to endure
advertisements that will appear whether or not
they're online. The ads will be stored on the
hard drive that ships with the PC, and displayed
along the side of the screen.
The price for this "free" PC doesn't end there.
The company will monitor how the computer is
used, tracking which of its ads are clicked on as
well as where users go -- and what they buy --
on the Web.
Free-PC.com, based in Pasadena, is the
brainchild of Bill Gross and his Net investment
firm Idealab. The company said it has US$10
million in backing from Barry Diller's USA
Networks, parent of Ticketmaster
Online-CitySearch, Internet Shopping
Network/First Auction, and Home Shopping
Network.
Gross says the giveaway is a viable business
strategy because well-defined consumers are
now more valuable than PCs, which long ago
crashed through the US$1,000 floor and are now
available for as little as $500.
"Free-PC is the breakthrough first product to
start an inevitable trend," Gross said in a press
release. "Merchants will pay to reach you, so
they essentially will subsidize the cost of the PC,
indirectly. We believe in the long term this
model will provide cost savings to a full range of
PC offerings through both retail and direct
channels."
Free-PC said Cybergold will provide the
advertising for its desktop, and listed Disney,
ESPN, credit-card issuer MBNA, Internet car
retailer autobytel.com, Earthlink, and America
Online as clients.
While those advertisers will get a wealth of
consumer information, they won't get the names
attached to that information, Free-PC executives
insisted.
"All information will be held in strict confidence
by Free-PC," CEO Don LaVigne said in a
statement. "No personal information will ever be
revealed to advertisers, and the company
promises to never sell or give away consumer
data to any third party."
The company said the PCs will be shipped in the
"second quarter of 1999." They will come with a
333-megahertz processor, a 4-gig hard drive, 32
megs of RAM, a 56.6K modem, and a 14-inch
monitor, and will be loaded with Windows 98 and
assorted software. Net access will be provided
by NetZero.
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